| Patrice Riemens on Thu, 12 Mar 2009 08:51:34 -0400 (EDT) |
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| <nettime> Ippolita Collective: The Dark Side of Google (Chapter 1, Second Part) |
Dear Nettimers again,
And a few more additions...
So the "Light and Shadows" are out again, and it's definitely "The Dark
Side..." . Damn commercial publishing houses! F. also didn't inform
Ippolita very much about the French translation, which they received only
once it was completed. As you may have noticed, there are a few problems
with it, and they promise to grow worse when I'll check it out with the
Italian original (not doing that presently, to get some speed, so feel
free to point to abominable divergences! ;-)
Btw, I am not best pleased to be called 'someone' ... by anyone.
And finaly, credit to whom credit is due: I wouldn't have heard of the
Ippolita Collective hadn't I been attended to them by Geert Lovink.
Cheers, patrizio and Diiiinooos!
--------------------------------
NB this book and translation are published under Creative Commons license
2.0
(Attribution, Non Commercial, Share Alike).
Commercial distribution requires the authorisation of the copyright
holders
Ippolita Collective and Feltrinelli Editore, Milano (.it)
Ippolita Collective
The Dark Side of Google (continued)
Chapter 1. The History of Search (Engines)
(continued from part one)
Style, Form, and Services Overflow ...
For Google begin 2000 meant most of its competitors had gone South, and
the times were ripe for a new round of innovations, starting with
proposing users a bevy of new services [*N20]
Every new service constitute a piece of a complex, constantly re(di)fined
mosaic, branching out to each and every domain of IT. At the time of
writing [end 2006/ begin 2007 -TR], Google offered 17 different types of
searches in data-banks of images, blogs, notes, books, maps, videos,
financial services, etc. But it can also search and retrieve documents
into a user's own computer. And there are many more services, present and
to come. Two are specifically geared to application development and new
projects under elaboration in Google's labs. There also 6 communication
enabling services: Google Mail, VoIP telephony, instant messaging,
discussion groups ('Google-groups'), picture-sharing, and translation
services. Three services are for mobile devices (GSMs, PDAs, etc.). And
finally, there is another service about software suggested by Google. And
the number of services keeps adding up...
Even the most dull-witted user can easily grasp the reach and power of
these instruments. By now, it is possible to key in a postal address or a
phone number, and Google will instantly disclose all you need to know in
order to contact a person or localise an object. One can also save one's
search preferences, making the repeated use of the search engine a
breathtakingly smooth experience. A typing error in the search query is
promptly corrected by a highly advanced spell-checker, which is also able
to 'learn' incrementally along the search process.
In 2001 Google launched "Google Images", a dedicated search engine which
in just a few weeks became the most sought after resource for
do-it-yourself graphic production and has become one of the Web's biggest
image banks. At the same time, Google also bought up Deja.com, and hence
the Usenet archives, which constitute, with over 650 million posts on
various newsgroups, a kind of "historic memory" of the Internet in its
pre-World Wide Web days, when such discussion groups were the life-blood
of the Net. By April 2001, Usenet got re-christened "Google-groups" with a
new, pleasant interface making it easy to follow the more elaborate, edgy
discussion threads.
>From 2001 onwards new services followed each other in quick succession, or
were upgraded without any apparent economic purpose or immediate financial
return, as if Brin and page were thrilled to show that a sheer
inexhaustible data retention center could also bring about next to any
technological feat one could dream about. The most illustrious instance of
this is probably "Google Map" [Google Earth?] a behemoth repository
mapping the Earth {in detail}, with some maps of the Moon, Mars {and the
Oceanic depths -TR} thrown in for good measure. Google Earth is a freely
downloadable software suite enabling you to visualise by way of satellite
images parts, or details, or at least a photographic rendering of any
surface of the Globe. And the "Google Directory" is home to the contents
of Dmoz.com. a collective of human agents organised within a collaborative
and decentralised system of 'open publishing', that has been present on
the Google home page for ages, but now sports an increasingly
sophisticated graphic design.
"Google News" saw the light in 2005, making Google's humongous data-bases
available to journalistic work. GMail started the same year, offering each
user 1 gigabyte of personal storage. Beta-launched on invitation-only
basis, it immediately created a network of personal linkages completely
internal to Planet Google. Privacy nay-sayers were promptly silenced with
the somewhat cranky argument that GMail was "an outstanding product", that
"its advantages far out-weight the doubts it may raise", and that "it's
bound to get ever better with time". Any user of GMail is however liable
to be controlled by Google in its use of the service, since the enormous
storage space made available is likely to incite her to leave all her mail
messages on its servers. And since usage of the service was spreading by
way on invites already registered users could freely extent in her circle,
Google obtained crucial information on individual networks of friends and
acquaintances. With other words, the archetype of an intrusive feature
geared towards 'data-mining'.
And then came the "Google Scholar" project, a universities-oriented search
engine still in 'beta-testing' mode [2006], which enables to retrieve
academic literature, but also articles submitted to reviews, working
papers, M.A. and PhD theses, university publications, reprints, table of
contents, bibliographies, reports, and reviews published across all
sectors of scientific/ academic research. And then we have Google Library,
whose ambition is to make available on line *all* books in digital format,
by going into agreements with libraries and even interested publishers
world-wide, and scan publications into e-books. Only the Google data
center could make into reality the dream of a global digital library,
accessible from Google pages. But this dream is meeting fierce opposition
from the side of a large part of US publishers who are members of the AAP
(American Association of Publishers). They fear a meltdown of their
profits. In 2005 AAP demanded the digitization of those works still under
copyright to be frozen for six month, pending further, and comprehensive,
explanation from Google's on its 'Library' project. Yet, despite
appearances, and copyright owners opposition, this initiative of Google
does not have the free circulation of knowledge as its aim. It is more
about a shift in the monopoly to information, which in this scheme would
be transferred from a handful of publishers to the one and only Google.
Like in all dreams, there is a flaw: a solitary, private entity, named
Google, is going to decide what constitutes the stock of collective
information, by making the same available through proprietary formats. The
Open Content Alliance was started in direct reaction to this project, and
it is supported by the Internet Archive, a non-profit, and by Yahoo! Its
objective is to make as much material as possible totally accessible,
through open formats.
Parallel to its opening new services, Google showed a remarkable ability
to milk the relational economy to the max, made possible by a keen
utilisation of the commercial data it indexes.
AdSense, launched in 2004, offers site owners the possibility to host
certain commercial links on their site, as suggested by Google on basis of
the site's subject and particular keywords. Revenues accruing from such
links are shared between Google and the owners of the participating sites.
The innovation there lies in monetizing the trust the site's users network
put in it. Google is then no longer on the Google site only, but
everywhere where the Google 'window' is welcomed, and that unobtrusive
little space promises to be always full of accurate and interesting data,
such as befits Google, even if these data bits are now commercial
suggestions. AdSense is thus factually the materialisation of a "Google
network", a specific network meant to cross-link users data with their
interrelationships for the benefit of advertisers. According to Google,
AdSense is the network of "sites and products partnering with Google to
put targeted AdWords advertisements on a site or a product[*N21]."
Obviously the AdSense system is also part and parcel of the "Google
Network".
And obviously, once you have put such a network in place, revenue must be
extracted. We are still in 2005, and Google now experiments with a 'rerun'
of the CPM model on the AdSense platform, following a 'site-by-site
targeting' model. Advertising will now again 'pay for eyeballs', but this
time not according to number of clicks on their banners but as a package
deal sold through an auction process. Advertisers are able to choose in
detail the profile of their prospective viewers: language, geographical
area, {issues of interest}, etc. But moreover, such views will only happen
within the 'Google network'. This appeals mostly to those who want to sell
a brand rather than a product, i.e. those vendors favouring indirect
marketing strategies. Here, 'brand awareness' is the name of the game,
rather than selling specific products to key-word selected potential
buyers such as is the case with the CPC advertising model.
This {virtuous, or hellish,} circle linking up the value management of its
own immaterial products with the organisation of the labour force, and the
framework of project development, is perfectly attuned to the modular
building blocks system upon which the entrepreneurial philosophy of the
firm Google is based. An endless growth is the precondition for the system
not to flounder. The number of users searching with Google and hence trust
their data unto it must increase ceaselessly in order for the advertisers
peddling their wares in the "Google network" to keep growing alongside.
There must be a continuous launch of new services, of new machines to keep
track of it all, of new employees to maintain, improve, and invent them,
of new users to make use of them, and of new advertisers to extract a
profit from, {and, and, and ...] Every new 'piece'of the system is being
introduced as a new module, in an endless cycle: ever growing stockpiles
of data, brains, users, and of their respective data, increasing quality
of the handling of these data, in the dealing with employees, in the
interaction with users and the management of their data archived in
Google's data centers. And this always under the imperative of speed and
further development.
Brin and Page don't hide where their ambitions lie. "Why would we let our
employees start their own firms only to buy them up later on when we can
pay them to stay with us, and do what they would have done in any case?"
The "Googleplex" [*N22], Google's operational Head Quarters in Mountain
View, California, is a kind of university campus where people are pampered
all the time. Employees are even given one day off a week to work on their
own projects, which are then shown to the "Google Duos", who offer both
money and the support of the firm to the most promising talents, as reward
for their efforts.
Google, the Good Giant, goes IPO ...
"Don't be evil" or you can do anything you want provided you're not
naughty: thus is the motto of Google's "capitalism with a human
face"[*N23]. But already, quite a number of cracks are showing up in this
'being Good' PR image: lawsuits galore, suggestions of fraud, sites being
blacked-out, etc.[*N24] ...
In 2002 Google had 1000 employees on its payroll and owned in excess of
10.000 computers [servers?]. Its service indexed over 4 billion documents
and its net profits (somewhat reluctantly disclosed) amounted to close to
US$ 185 million. Given such a size, investors were starting to demand more
transparency, more control, and a more credible business profile. It's
allright to have two brilliant - if eccentric - engineers at the helm, but
please hire also a general manager with a proven development track record!
After a few less than felicitous get togethers and some intemperate public
statements, the role of CEO of Google Inc. finally devolved to Eric
Schmidt (who was already a top dog at Sun Microsytems and then Novell).
The two young prodigies keep taking pot shot decisions but this strategic
managerial move soon proved to be a sound economic choice. Schmidt's
arrival actually coincided with the first semester that the firm was in
the black, demonstrating herewith that it has succeeded in making its
products billable.
Page and Brin had postponed as long as they could the moment their company
needed to go public, as they feared they would be forced to go on record
regarding their business perspectives and profit expectations and that
this would make their life less fun. It would also have made Google a much
more open book, and presented its competitors on the market with sticks to
beat it with.
But after the introduction of AdSense in 2004, and despite Page's
pronouncements to the effect that "Google is not your run of the mill
company, and has no intention to become one", the colossus became to all
intent and purposes precisely that: an all-American publicly traded
company.
Just before the IPO, Yahoo! and other competitors lodged scores of
complaints against Google, claiming copyrights and patents infringements
with the aim to ruin the firm's reputation even before it has sold its
first share.
Wall Street was then on the verge of lowering the initial floor price for
the bid in view of the encountered difficulties, but Brin and Page managed
to bury the biggest lawsuit, the one with Yahoo! by paying Filo and Yang a
compensation in Google shares and settling the different regarding
patents. Upon which the duo, against the Stock exchange's best advice,
proceeded with the IPO, in the midst of August, and with a US$ 20
reduction of the share price.
Yet within a day of trading, Google shares lifted from their US$ 85
launch price to US$ 100, leveraging a cool US$ 1,5 billion of paper profit
in the process. One year later Google shares were quoted at US$ 400, or a
300% increase in value. Google Inc. appeared to be surfing the wave in a
marvellous world where nobody is bad, everybody wins, and evil simply does
not occur. Granted, with such figures even a small downturn in share
prices means millions of Dollars going up in smoke, as happened in March
2006 when Google lost seven percentage points. Google is now a giant
amongst the giants on the world's stock markets, and if it ever sneezes,
many risk catching a cold with it.
Google Inc. or the Monopoly on Search
In October 2004, Brin and Page were flying their company jet when they
learned that AOL (America On Line, the biggest US Internet access
provider) had just closed a deal with Yahoo! to incorporate its search
engine into their service. The youthful entrepreneurs immediately ordered
a change of course, flew to London, and managed to prevail on AOL to shred
the contract they just had signed and opt for a sweetheart deal Google, to
the tune of a cool 50 million US$. It's not exactly what you would call
the gentle and open approach you would expect from the "good giant", but
hey, business is business, even for the two nice guys research scientists
from Mountain View!
In the meanwhile, Google's profits have grown by a multiplier of 4000 in
the course of a mere 5 years, making it the closest direct competitor to
Microsoft and Yahoo!, and this not only in terms of stock market
capitalisation, but foremost in terms of popularity and hence of cultural
domination of the consumer's mind. Millions of users are now using Google
as their starting page when they go on the web. And they trust the results
they get through the tools developed in Mountain View. Today Google's name
is uttered in the same breath as the Web or even the Internet. The
Californian search engine scores best when it comes to milk the relational
network of its users and extract every cent possible out of millions small
advertisers, so much so that for 2005, available data suggest an income
in the range of 6 Billion Dollars on advertising products (whereas
estimates for Yahoo!'s similar activities amount to US$ 4,6 bn).
The first swamp Google got bogged in had to do with complaints that its
searches were conflicting with the (US) legislation on trademarks.
Symptomatic were the cases of Geico and American Blind & Wallpaper Factory
[& More ?] vs Google[*N25]. In both cases the complainants alleged that
Google's AdWords service was illegally selling trademarked name-words. The
tricky question was whether complainants could prevent Google from making
appear their competitor's links when users would query on terms like
'geico', 'american blind', or 'american wallpaper'. Would a court follow
that argument, then Google's and its partners' would face a severe drop in
their revenues, since any owner of a trademark could deny its use by
AdWords, and sue Google if it ever did. In France, {luxury goods firm}
Louis Vuiton went to court on this and won. Google's answer is that if any
tort occurs, it is the responsibility of announcers themselves and not of
Google, since its role is merely that of a neutral carrier, and that
besides, "attempts to limit the sale of trademarked terms amount to a
denial of the freedom of expression". Sounds like making good sense - for
Google at least. [? intp. by TR]
however, Mountain View's giant itself falls foul on the freedom of
expression issue it argued against complaining firms, where it breaches
the trust many users have given it in a matter that constitutes one of the
most important sources of revenues. Google has always shielded behind the
argument that the actualisation process of of its search algorithms and
the objectivity of the workings of its machine were proof that query
returns were beyond any kind of manipulation. But then, just before the
American Blind case went to court, it had decided to withdraw a number of
AdWords that had been purchased by Oceana, an activist group [*N26].
Oceana's 'mistake' had been to publish an environmentally motivated
critique of the operations of Royal Caribbean Cruise Lines, itself a major
Google investor. This could be retrieved when searching for the
{'AdWorded'} terms 'cruise vacation' or 'cruise ship', keywords users
would normally use to look for information about cruise holidays or
associated activities. Google's official statement was that being a
neutral medium, it could not condone any propaganda campaign deemed to be
detrimental to the good name of other enterprises. Obviously, in such
cases, freedom of expression is no longer a paramount concern.
To make things even weirder, on the very day the San Jose District Court
was in session on the American Blind case, Google's search results in that
very district were mysteriously at variance with results obtained in any
other part of the world! For the first attested time, Google was caught
manipulating search results with an other aim than to return "the best
possible answer to a query". The fact that the court ruled in favor of
Google in the Geico case (which was analogous to the American Blind one)
does little to detract from this unsavoury episode.
The most embarrassing and best known case till now pertains to Google
entrance into the Chinese market. In order to penetrate this fast-growing
[potentially immense} market, google for the first time, publicly abode by
a demand for censorship, making sites deemed illegal by Beijing
authorities inaccessible to searches from out the Chinese territory. A
Harvard study in 2002 had already shown that Google was blacking out 113
sites in its French and German language versions (Google.DE and
Google.FR). Google confirmed the facts, but argued that these pages had
only be withdrawn on request of local government agencies and police
authorities, and only after a careful analysis of their contents. Many
sites were racism-oriented, others were informed by religious fanaticism.
Someone then raked up a controversy, stating that Google's much vaunted
transparency was crumbling and that users should be made aware of the
existence of a 'hidden censorship'. Others countered that Google was not
to blame, but rather the law system in particular jurisdictions where you
could get sued merely for the providing a link {to an incriminated site}
on your page. In such cases, it is natural that Google chooses to avoid
legal consequences by withdrawing links after assessing the risks on
individual basis. It should noted, while we are at it, that the issue of
the 'right to link' is going to be a major bone of contention within the
issue of digital liberties at large: who decides what is legitimate
censorship? An umpteenth 'Authority'? Or an international body? Or will it
be 'might is right'? In a market economy, that amounts to the right of the
party that pays the most, or carries most weight. Or will local, usually
religious, fundamentalists have the last word, who black-mail with
reprisals every time a 'subversive' site runs foul of their particular
world-view? This problem is as far-reaching as the issue of freedom of
expression itself, and obviously cannot be resolved in a court room.
Emotions ran high in the Chinese case, because the censorship bid came
from a government. Yet Brin and Page were too focused on the potential of
a market representing a quarter of the world population to backtrack,
despite this massive scale-up of the issue at stake.
For Google, the world will fast become a gigantic index in which a perfect
correlation will obtain between digital resources and ambient reality.
Each and every index will become computable by an algorithm and presented
as a search result in the most convenient manner. And Google will be in
pole position to be the instrument that shall maintain that index.
But, quite aside from the obvious observation that digital and real worlds
do not necessarily coincide, even they are very much intertwined, and that
not even from a technical point of view. The perfect algorithm simply does
not exist. It is simply not possible to retrieve *all* informations that
exits on-line. Also, nothing that is in the technological domain can be
considered really neutral, especially not if it pertains to real-world
data of on line individuals.
Stemming from the partnership that are likely to be entered upon, and of
the technological convergence coming every day nearer, a new direction
appears to emerge, and Goog;e's 'vision' is forcing it upon us as the one
and only access point, and management and mediation of digital data.
Google's dystopia as Big Brother wannabee becomes more precise, and is bot
dangerous and fascinating, as every historic power struggle: the Web is
the new stage for a fierce competition to establish the new standard of
communication. A standard that, paradoxically, is "personalised", with
offers and services that are geared towards the users' individual needs
and tastes. for a few years now, the keyword has been "mass
personalisation". An oxymoron for sure, but one that comes loaded with the
importance of the game, and which represents a paradigm shift, away from
mass production consumerism towards a personalised one, sold to us as
"freedom of choice". As for us, beyond rhetorical platitudes, we could
find a response to this by simply making different choices: the question
is not whether or not to use Google and its services, but to choose other
ways to put {our personal} information on the Internet, and to learn how
to link them up in a new fashion, making for more innovative and
interesting trajectories for each one of us [*N28].
Since a number of years, Google has been learning to its own costs (and
those of its users, of course) that innocence does not really belong to
this world, and even less to the world of business, that total goodness
amounts to stupidity in general, and more particularly so for a firm whose
main goal is to make a profit, and that finally, neutrality is a very
uphill road when war is raging between {competing} search engines. And at
this juncture it may be recalled that those nations that are traditionally
neutral, like Switzerland, are also traditionally militarised to the core.
And so we can see which kind of 'good' weapons Google has been using to
achieve the status of a world class phenomenon.
[END of Chapter 1]
--------------------------
Translated by Patrice Riemens
This translation project is supported and facilitated by:
The Center for Internet and Society, Bangalore
(http://cis-india.org)
The Tactical Technology Collective, Bangalore Office
(http://www.tacticaltech.org)
Visthar, Dodda Gubbi post, Kothanyur-Bangalore
(http://www.visthar.org)
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